Jaffery eBook

William John Locke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 393 pages of information about Jaffery.

Jaffery eBook

William John Locke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 393 pages of information about Jaffery.

“Yes, he did,” said Barbara.

Doria brushed away the hypothesis.  “You poor things!  You’re merely saying that to shield him.  A blind imbecile could see through you”—­I have already apologised to you for our being the unconvincing liars that we were—­“you know nothing more about it than I do.  You ought to, as I’ve already said.  But you don’t.  In fact, you know considerably less.  Shall I tell you where the manuscripts are at the present moment?”

“No, my dear,” said Barbara, in the plaintive voice of one who has come to the end of a profitless talk; for you cannot imagine how utterly wearied we were with the whole of the miserable business.  “Let us wait till Jaffery comes home.  It won’t be so very long.”

“Yes, Doria,” said I, soothingly.  “Barbara’s right.  You can’t condemn a man without a hearing?”

Doria laughed scornfully.  “Can’t I?  I’m a woman, my dear friend.  And when a woman condemns a man unheard she’s much more merciful than when she condemns him after listening to his pleadings.  Then she gets really angry, and perhaps does the man injustice.”

I gasped at the monstrous proposition; but Barbara did not seem to detect anything particularly wrong about it.

“At any rate,” said I, “whether you condemn him or not, we can’t do anything until he comes home.  So we had better leave it at that.”

“Very well,” said Doria.  “Let us leave it for the present.  I don’t want to be more of a worry to you dear people than I can help.  But that’s where Adrian’s manuscripts are, both of them”—­and she pointed to the key of Jaffery’s flat hanging with its staring label against my library wall.

Of course it was rather mean to throw the entire onus on to Jaffery.  But again, what could we do?  Doria put her pistol at our heads and demanded Adrian’s original manuscripts.  She had every reason to believe in their existence.  Wittekind had never seen them.  Vandal and Goth and every kind of Barbarian that she considered Jaffery to be, it was inconceivable that he had deliberately destroyed them.  It was equally inconceivable that he had sold the precious things for vulgar money.  They remained therefore in his possession.  Why did he lie?  We could supply no satisfactory answer; and the more solutions we offered the more did we confirm in her mind the suspicion of dark and nefarious dealings.  If it were only to gain time in order to think and consult, we had to refer her to the absent Jaffery.

“My dear,” said I to Barbara, when we were alone, “we’re in a deuce of a mess.”

“I’m afraid we are.”

“Henceforward,” said I, “we’re going to live like selfish pigs, with no thought about anybody but ourselves and our own little pig and about anything outside our nice comfortable sty.”

“We’ll do nothing of the kind,” said Barbara.

“You’ll see,” said I.  “I’m a lion of egotism when I’m roused.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Jaffery from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.